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Companies with cash-rich balance sheets are cutting loose some green or accessing the debt markets, declaring one-time distributions that will be payable this month, or moving dividend dates from 2013 to the last few days in 2012. (Think
Fluor (FLR)).

And, why not? The tax rate on qualified dividends that currently maxes out at 15% are likely to nearly triple for some high-income earners as we approach the fiscal cliff. If a company has ever wanted to return money to its shareholders in an effort to get on the good side of patient investors, this may be the last month in a long time when it makes sense. But does this really do anything to enhance share value? The answer is NO. What's the problem? The key word is "one-time." Paying taxes on profits is a high-quality problem. At the end of the day, investors want growth and will always pay a premium. Even with dividends, I would rather see a 2% or 3% yield that grows every two or three years that can be comfortably covered with earnings, than an 8% yield which may or may not be paid out.

Let's review a couple of names and see how this plays out. Warehouse club operator and household names
Costco (COST) pays a quarterly dividend of $0.275 a share (1.1% yield). The new $7 special dividend announced last week is equal to 6+ years of the regular dividend. The company has only been paying a dividend since 2004 and still largely considered a growth play. In addition, the special payment represents most of the company's cash on hand, but management is selling new debt to cover the one-time payout.

Las Vegas Sands (LVS) cashed out some chips, declaring a special one-time dividend of $2.75 per share, which will set back the casino operator more than $2.2 billion. The company has enough cash on hand to cover the payout, but 2.5x more debt than cash on the balance sheet.

Special dividends aren't bad, but you should not base stock selection for a long-term portfolio solely on hopes that a company will return cash on a one-time basis. There is so much speculation in the market as to who is next? Could it possibly be a mega-cap tech name like an
Apple (AAPL),
IBM (IBM) or
Microsoft (MSFT) because they are like giant bank holding companies?